December 17, 2019

OGC announces virtualcitySYSTEMS as the winner of the 2019 OGC CityGML Challenge

The winning spot was awarded for creating the CityGML 3 visualization tool with the most comprehensive data integration environment, 3D analysis tools, and integration of other standards.

The Manchester 3D Data Viewer was developed by virtualcitySYSTEMS as the winning entry to the 2019 CityGML Challenge.
The Manchester 3D Data Viewer was developed by virtualcitySYSTEMS as the winning entry to the 2019 CityGML Challenge.

The Open Geospatial Consortium (OGC), Ordnance Survey (OS), and Triangulum are proud to announce that Claus Nagel and Thomas Adolphi of virtualcitySYSTEMS have been chosen as the winning team of the 2019 CityGML Challenge. As the winners of the Challenge, the developers were awarded a £5000 prize and were able to showcase the “Manchester 3D Data Viewer” tool at OGC's recent Technical Committee meeting in Toulouse, France.

The CityGML Challenge was conducted under OGC's Innovation Program, a collaborative, agile, and hands-on prototyping and engineering environment where sponsors and OGC members come together to address location interoperability challenges while validating international open standards.

The Challenge tasked software developers to configure visualisation software tools to support the capabilities of CityGML version 3, including dynamic data feeds from a range of sensors. The winning entry was chosen because it provided the most comprehensive data integration environment, 3D analysis tools, and the integration of a variety of other OGC standards.

OGC's CityGML standard is an open data model and format for the storage and exchange of virtual 3D city models. The challenge focused on the city of Manchester, UK. OS is supporting Manchester City Council in the delivery of the European Commission funded Triangulum project, and has collated a range of data resources relating to the geography of Manchester's Oxford Road Corridor in the form of a data model in the draft CityGML 3 standard. 

“The judges were impressed by the functionality of the application: how rich and varied datasets came together and are instantly usable, and that a number of other OGC standards, including the SensorThings API and the transactional Web Feature Service (WFS-T), were implemented,” said panel judge Carsten Roensdorf, Strategic Product Manager at Ordnance Survey. “Making the application available for the coming 12 months will provide the Manchester and OGC communities a platform on which CityGML v3 can be showcased as a standard that facilitates data integration in the urban environment.”

“Our entire virtualcitySYSTEMS team is very grateful and proud to have been recognized as the winner of the OGC CityGML Challenge,” said Claus Nagel, CTO at virtualcitySYSTEMS. “To be part of this OGC challenge was truly challenging, but a wonderful experience. Diving into all these data, preparing them, and making them interoperable in one environment and in a standardized way was fantastic. We strongly believe in open standards to improve collaboration and decision-making at all levels, and we are building our applications on top of the geospatial standards from OGC. This is in our company DNA – so thanks to OGC for supporting us and all our fellows on this way.” 

The winning tool and visualisation environment will be openly available for one year for wider experimentation and innovation purposes.

CItyGML has been successfully used in a number of city models in cities as diverse as Rotterdam, Singapore, and Chongqing. OGC has been working on CityGML version 3 for some time. The draft CityGML 3 data model and encoding are publicly available on GitHub and are now being validated in implementations.

Key changes between CityGML 3.0 and previous versions include: 

  • a cleaner distinction between the conceptual model and encoding; 
  • flexibility to model indoor structures in different Levels of Detail;
  • dynamic data handling as part of the standard, rather than an extension; and
  • better modelling of the spaces that people use, as well as the ‘concrete.'

 

About virtualcitySYSTEMS
virtualcitySYSTEMS is a leading solution provider for 3D spatial data infrastructures based on open standards. Build on their software technology stack and market expertise, they offer tailored solutions for managing, visualizing, hosting and usage of 3D city and 3D landscape models. The portfolio of virtualcitySYSTEMS covers solutions for surveying, mapping, and GIS as well as for city planning and urban simulations.

About OS
Ordnance Survey (OS) is the national mapping agency for Great Britain, and a world-leading geospatial data and technology organisation. As a reliable partner to government, business and citizens across Britain and the world, OS helps its customers in virtually all sectors improve quality of life. OS expertise and data supports efficient public services and infrastructure, new technologies in transport and communications, national security and emergency services and exploring the great outdoors. By being at the forefront of geospatial capability for more than 225 years, we've built a reputation as the world's most inspiring and trusted geospatial partner. 

About Triangulum
The Triangulum project is a European Union Horizon 2020 funded project in Manchester, bringing together a partnership of public bodies and private companies. The focus is to contribute to the development of a “smart city district” along the Oxford Road Corridor as the innovation district. The Manchester partners are the University of Manchester, Manchester Metropolitan University, Siemens, local SME, Pixel Mill Digital, and Manchester City Council. The project covers the three themes of energy, mobility and ICT to explore innovative solutions to reduce energy consumption.

About OGC
The Open Geospatial Consortium (OGC) is an international consortium of more than 530 businesses, government agencies, research organizations, and universities driven to make geospatial (location) information and services FAIR – Findable, Accessible, Interoperable, and Reusable.
OGC's member-driven consensus process creates royalty free, publicly available geospatial standards. Existing at the cutting edge, OGC actively analyzes and anticipates emerging tech trends, and runs an agile, collaborative Research and Development (R&D) lab that builds and tests innovative prototype solutions to members' use cases.
OGC members together form a global forum of experts and communities that use location to connect people with technology and improve decision-making at all levels. OGC is committed to creating a sustainable future for us, our children, and future generations.
Visit ogc.org for more info on our work.

About OGC

The Open Geospatial Consortium (OGC) is a membership organization dedicated to using the power of geography and technology to solve problems faced by people and the planet. OGC unlocks value and opportunity for its members through Standards, Innovation, and Policy & Advocacy. Our membership represents a diverse and active global community drawn from government, industry, academia, international development agencies, research & scientific organizations, civil society, and advocates

December 17, 2019

OGC announces virtualcitySYSTEMS as the winner of the 2019 OGC CityGML Challenge

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The winning spot was awarded for creating the CityGML 3 visualization tool with the most comprehensive data integration environment, 3D analysis tools, and integration of other standards.

The Manchester 3D Data Viewer was developed by virtualcitySYSTEMS as the winning entry to the 2019 CityGML Challenge.

The Open Geospatial Consortium (OGC), Ordnance Survey (OS), and Triangulum are proud to announce that Claus Nagel and Thomas Adolphi of virtualcitySYSTEMS have been chosen as the winning team of the 2019 CityGML Challenge. As the winners of the Challenge, the developers were awarded a £5000 prize and were able to showcase the “Manchester 3D Data Viewer” tool at OGC’s recent Technical Committee meeting in Toulouse, France.

The CityGML Challenge was conducted under OGC’s Innovation Program, a collaborative, agile, and hands-on prototyping and engineering environment where sponsors and OGC members come together to address location interoperability challenges while validating international open standards.

The Challenge tasked software developers to configure visualisation software tools to support the capabilities of CityGML version 3, including dynamic data feeds from a range of sensors. The winning entry was chosen because it provided the most comprehensive data integration environment, 3D analysis tools, and the integration of a variety of other OGC standards.

OGC’s CityGML standard is an open data model and format for the storage and exchange of virtual 3D city models. The challenge focused on the city of Manchester, UK. OS is supporting Manchester City Council in the delivery of the European Commission funded Triangulum project, and has collated a range of data resources relating to the geography of Manchester’s Oxford Road Corridor in the form of a data model in the draft CityGML 3 standard. 

“The judges were impressed by the functionality of the application: how rich and varied datasets came together and are instantly usable, and that a number of other OGC standards, including the SensorThings API and the transactional Web Feature Service (WFS-T), were implemented,” said panel judge Carsten Roensdorf, Strategic Product Manager at Ordnance Survey. “Making the application available for the coming 12 months will provide the Manchester and OGC communities a platform on which CityGML v3 can be showcased as a standard that facilitates data integration in the urban environment.”

“Our entire virtualcitySYSTEMS team is very grateful and proud to have been recognized as the winner of the OGC CityGML Challenge,” said Claus Nagel, CTO at virtualcitySYSTEMS. “To be part of this OGC challenge was truly challenging, but a wonderful experience. Diving into all these data, preparing them, and making them interoperable in one environment and in a standardized way was fantastic. We strongly believe in open standards to improve collaboration and decision-making at all levels, and we are building our applications on top of the geospatial standards from OGC. This is in our company DNA – so thanks to OGC for supporting us and all our fellows on this way.” 

The winning tool and visualisation environment will be openly available for one year for wider experimentation and innovation purposes.

CItyGML has been successfully used in a number of city models in cities as diverse as Rotterdam, Singapore, and Chongqing. OGC has been working on CityGML version 3 for some time. The draft CityGML 3 data model and encoding are publicly available on GitHub and are now being validated in implementations.

Key changes between CityGML 3.0 and previous versions include: 

  • a cleaner distinction between the conceptual model and encoding; 
  • flexibility to model indoor structures in different Levels of Detail;
  • dynamic data handling as part of the standard, rather than an extension; and
  • better modelling of the spaces that people use, as well as the ‘concrete.’

 

About virtualcitySYSTEMS
virtualcitySYSTEMS is a leading solution provider for 3D spatial data infrastructures based on open standards. Build on their software technology stack and market expertise, they offer tailored solutions for managing, visualizing, hosting and usage of 3D city and 3D landscape models. The portfolio of virtualcitySYSTEMS covers solutions for surveying, mapping, and GIS as well as for city planning and urban simulations.

About OS
Ordnance Survey (OS) is the national mapping agency for Great Britain, and a world-leading geospatial data and technology organisation. As a reliable partner to government, business and citizens across Britain and the world, OS helps its customers in virtually all sectors improve quality of life. OS expertise and data supports efficient public services and infrastructure, new technologies in transport and communications, national security and emergency services and exploring the great outdoors. By being at the forefront of geospatial capability for more than 225 years, we’ve built a reputation as the world’s most inspiring and trusted geospatial partner. 

About Triangulum
The Triangulum project is a European Union Horizon 2020 funded project in Manchester, bringing together a partnership of public bodies and private companies. The focus is to contribute to the development of a “smart city district” along the Oxford Road Corridor as the innovation district. The Manchester partners are the University of Manchester, Manchester Metropolitan University, Siemens, local SME, Pixel Mill Digital, and Manchester City Council. The project covers the three themes of energy, mobility and ICT to explore innovative solutions to reduce energy consumption.

About OGC
The Open Geospatial Consortium (OGC) is an international consortium of more than 530 businesses, government agencies, research organizations, and universities driven to make geospatial (location) information and services FAIR – Findable, Accessible, Interoperable, and Reusable.
OGC’s member-driven consensus process creates royalty free, publicly available geospatial standards. Existing at the cutting edge, OGC actively analyzes and anticipates emerging tech trends, and runs an agile, collaborative Research and Development (R&D) lab that builds and tests innovative prototype solutions to members’ use cases.
OGC members together form a global forum of experts and communities that use location to connect people with technology and improve decision-making at all levels. OGC is committed to creating a sustainable future for us, our children, and future generations.
Visit ogc.org for more info on our work.

About OGC

The Open Geospatial Consortium (OGC) is a membership organization dedicated to using the power of geography and technology to solve problems faced by people and the planet. OGC unlocks value and opportunity for its members through Standards, Innovation, and Policy & Advocacy. Our membership represents a diverse and active global community drawn from government, industry, academia, international development agencies, research & scientific organizations, civil society, and advocates

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